NZ dollar surges against Aussie rival

THE New Zealand dollar touched a fresh eight-year high against its trans-Tasman counterpart after an Australian central bank member said the Aussie currency should be lower.

The kiwi hit 95.31 Australian cents over the weekend, its highest level since December 2005.

The local currency was trading at 94.61 Australian cents at 8am in Wellington from 94.48 cents at 5pm on Friday.

The New Zealand dollar touched a two-week low of 82.08 US cents over the weekend as investors moved away from riskier assets. It was trading at 82.32 US cents at 8am from 82.11 cents at the New York close and 82.81 cents at 5pm on Friday.

Investors are favouring so-called safe haven assets such as the Japanese yen, Swiss franc, US dollar, US Treasuries and gold and selling riskier assets such as the high-yielding New Zealand dollar and stocks on concern about emerging markets.

"People are getting out of their riskier investments and they are willing to sacrifice the gains that they could possibly get in there for safety as we enter a relatively uncertain moment in time," said Stuart Ive, senior adviser at OMF. "There are still some adjustments taking place in global economies."

The local currency continued its ascent against the Australian dollar after Australian central bank board member Heather Ridout was quoted in the Wall Street Journal on Friday saying the Aussie had not fallen far enough.

The Federal Reserve has its first meeting of the year this week and may continue to taper its $US75 billion a month bond-buying programme. New Zealand's central bank also meets this week, with some traders expecting an interest rate hike.

The New Zealand dollar touched a seven-week low of 83.91 yen over the weekend and was trading at 84.25 yen at 8am from 85.67 yen on Friday.

The kiwi touched a three-week low of 59.89 euro cents at the weekend and was trading at 60.19 cents at 8am from 60.50 cents on Friday.

The local currency advanced to 49.94 British pence from 49.77 pence on Friday. The trade-weighted index slipped to 78.11 from 78.42 on Friday.